If in that situation, myself...i'd say lets fuck with all the auto pilot crap...I need to take full control and cowboy land this MFer...You may as well become accustomed with the hand controls before the money shot landing

Even though I've flown small planes (and even flew a couple big planes for a few minutes (!)), landing a big one would be intimidating to say the least. I've been in the cockpit endless times and sat up there for takeoff and landing, but this video explains what was going on as I watched.

When you're below 10,000 feet, you're in 'sterile cockpit' which means nothing can be said that doesn't relate to the operation of the aircraft. So, no dumb question when on final approach.

If you get lucky when you have to take over an unmanned cammercial flight, you'll get one that has auto-land, auto-brake and auto-steering. Modern aircraft can have any or all of the above.

So just think, the next time you land on your flight to see the in-laws, it could be the aircraft doing the whole thing, although it takes a detailed setup procedure as well as close monitoring by the pilots to be 'safe' -- but in a pinch I think I would rely on the aircraft rather than my (lack of) skill.

In fact, auto-land can get a plane on the ground with ZERO visibility -- but 50 feet is required because you have to actually see the runway to steer centerline.

BTW, the chances of both pilots becoming incapacitated and there being no other pilots on board would be exceedingly rare.

If in that situation, myself...i'd say lets fuck with all the auto pilot crap...I need to take full control and cowboy land this MFer...You may as well become accustomed with the hand controls before the money shot landing

MALAYSIA AIRLINES FLIGHT MH370: PILOT FOUND ALIVE IN TAIWAN HOSPITAL? CRUEL VIRAL HOAX ATTACKED BY OFFICIALS
Ever since the mysterious disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 almost two years ago — on March 8, 2014 — a seemingly endless stream of false leads, unconfirmed theories and bizarre speculation has circulated on the Internet. But the latest strange MH370 theory is more of an outright hoax, and it appears to have fooled numerous Internet users as it went viral last week.

In fact, the shocking hoax gained so much attention online that top Malaysia government officials were forced to issue an issue an official denial.

Possibly originating in an online publication under the name World News Daily Report — though it may have in fact started on a similar site known as Link Beef— the viral hoax centered around an apparent photo of a seriously injured man in a hospital bed, a man the supposed news site identified as Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 pilot Zaharie Ahmad Shah.

Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 hoax photo [Photo via Facebook]
According to the phony “news” report, Shah “has mysteriously reappeared in a Taiwan hospital on Monday, suffering from severe dehydration and some type of amnesia.”
“The 53-year-old pilot was transported at the Taipei Adventist Hospital by a couple of villagers from a nearby town. They claimed to have found the man while he was lying unconscious on the banks of the Tangshui River,” the alleged report asserts.

There is no “Tangshui River” in Taiwan, though, and the hoax story may be attempting to reference the country’s Tamsui River.

And indeed, the man in the photo has been identified, and is definitely not Zaharie Ahmad Shah.

The hoax-debunking site Snopes.com tracked down the source of the photo and found it at an online publication called The Irrawaddy, devoted to Southeast Asia news. In an article from January 2014, the hospital patient in the photo is identified as “Aung Myo Oo, a Burmese migrant who was attacked by unknown assailants on June 3, 2013.” The hospital in which the unfortunate migrant is seen recovering, according to the Irrawaddy article, is not in Taiwan at all, but in fact in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

The article says that the photo of Aung Myo Oo was taken on June 3, 2013, more than nine months before the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370.

“The ministry will provide updates on MH370 from time to time. Any information regarding MH370 must be referred to us,” Liow cautioned reporters quizzing him about the viral photo claiming to show the Malaysia Airlines pilot alive. “Do not speculate.”

The Malaysia consulate in Taiwan also issued a denial of the hoax report.

The latest Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 false report joins a long list of strange theories, hoaxes and reports about the baffling fate of the missing Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777-200, ranging from the plausible to the outlandish.

Jeff Wise, a science writer and expert on the Flight MH370 case, proposed a theory last year saying that the plane had flown north, rather than south as the official investigators believe, landing somewhere in Kazakhstan — the victim of a highly sophisticated hijacking.

On the other end of the spectrum, CNN news anchor Don Lemon proposed that the Malaysia Airlines plane had been somehow sucked into a black hole.

Last week, some family members of Chinese passengers on the missing Flight MH370 issued a statement in which they state their belief that the Malaysia Airlines plane never actually crashed into the Indian Ocean, where the official search effort has been focused since September 2014. Instead, the families say, they believe that — similar to the theory proposed by Wise — the plane was hijacked and the passengers may remain alive somewhere in the world, almost two years later.